A good weekend for science in the Sunday New York Times, with a nice magazine article about dark matter and dark energy, and also a piece about the Search for Extra-Terrestrial Intelligence (SETI), inexplicably located in the Book Review section (the article, that is, not the aliens). It’s probably possible to draw some sort of… Continue reading Dark Aliens in the Times
Category: Science
Abrupt Climate Change, Past, Present, and Future
Dr. Lonnie Thompson of THE Ohio State University spoke at Union Wednesday night as part of the Environmental Studies Seminar Series on Abrupt Climate Change. Dr Thompson is an eminent climate scientist, and has spent thirty-ish years doing research on glaciers around the world, and what I learned from his talk is that I’ll never… Continue reading Abrupt Climate Change, Past, Present, and Future
The Problem of Praise
The Cosmic Variance post that led to the Cult of Theory post earlier this week was really about a New York magazine article about the negative effects of praising kids for intelligence. It mostly concerns a study done by Carol Dweck, in which fifth-graders who were praised for being smart after an easy test were… Continue reading The Problem of Praise
Brother Guy On Ice
Kate has posted a report on Boskone talk by Brother Guy Consolmagno, on hunting for meteorites in Antarctica. Guy is a Jesuit brother, and also a research astronomer for the Vatican, and a better example of the peaceful coexistence of science and religion would be hard to find. He’s also a very entertaining speaker. I… Continue reading Brother Guy On Ice
Inscrutable Science Update
It’s a good day for people posting about science I don’t understand… Peter Woit points to the Non-Commutative Geometry blog, at which Alain Connes, the godfather of non-commutative geometry, is posting. It’s not the most polished blog, but if you can understand what they’re talking about, it’s probably interesting. Scott Aaronson is excited about new… Continue reading Inscrutable Science Update
Extrasolar Planetary Atmospheres
The only reason I’m not going to hunt and kill James Nicoll for pointing me at the Conservapedia thing is that he also provides a link to the latest results from the Spitzer telescope. Not the one that Kate’s former boss uses to keep an eye on the New York State Legislature, but the one… Continue reading Extrasolar Planetary Atmospheres
Comprehensible Is the New Black
John Scalzi is being railroaded into heading a new movement in SF: The New Comprehensible. He disdains manifestoes (“people who issue literary manifestos should be thrown into jet engines”), but does offer a set of precepts for people seeking to write in the New Comprehensible: 1. Think of an actual person you know, of reasonable… Continue reading Comprehensible Is the New Black
The Definitive Statement on Marcus Ross
As usual, Scott Aaronson says it better than I did: [M]ost of the commentary strikes me as missing a key point: that to give a degree to a bozo like this, provided he indeed did the work, can only reflect credit on the scientific enterprise. Will Ross now hit the creationist lecture circuit, trumpeting his… Continue reading The Definitive Statement on Marcus Ross
Want to Be a Doctor? Major in Physics
Somebody at work had printed out a table of MCAT scores by major, compiled by the AIP. I couldn’t find it on the web, but I found the original source, and made my own version of the relevant bit. This shows the average numerical scores on the three sections of the MCAT test for students… Continue reading Want to Be a Doctor? Major in Physics
New Particles and Epicycles
PhysicsWeb has a story about a new theory of axions that claims to resolve some discrepancies between past experiments. Two previous experiments looking for axions– hypothetical weakly interacting particles that might be an explanation for dark matter– have found conflicting results: the CAST experiment looking for axions produced in the Sun found nothing, while the… Continue reading New Particles and Epicycles